Category Archives: Communications, Connection, Internet, Web, Media
Speculation on Six Apart: who will buy it and for how much?
Russell Beattie is getting together a Six Apart price pool.
I knew the The New York Times bought About.com, but for $820,000 per weblog? Wow.
More discussion on About.com and NYTimes at Jay Rosen’s PressThink, at John Battelle’s Searchblog, at Dan Gillmor’s Grassroots Journalism, and an interview with Martin Nisenholtz, SVP-Digital Operations, NYTimes, at PaidContent.
Speaking of weblog hosting companies, a relative surprised me with his Xanga blog. I took a look around – it seems a very simple and easy to use blog hosting community. Like LiveJournal, it allows you to post privately, to selected lists of people. Impressive.
Giving it a name: Ajax
Jesse James Garrett posts an introduction to Ajax the application model that Google has used to develop their most recent hits – Google Suggest, Google Maps, and Gmail.
Truth be told, these technologies have been around for a while. The best article on all this is over at Apple’s site and was written way back in May 2004.
Flash developers are probably yawning over this too since, to a Flash web app developer, this isn’t a revolutionary idea – it’s simply the way things are done. And Flash developers can make requests across domains. Something that JavaScript can’t.
Still… this looks to open the door for all sorts of interesting UIs and if you already know JavaScript – you’re ahead of the game.
Search Philadelphia Blogs!
I’m very excited to announce that you can now do keyword searches on the latest blog postings in the Philadelphia region.
This is different from Technorati in an important respect: the blogs that Philly Future aggregates are verified to be quality blogs by the editorial team of the site.
Right now the search functionality is rather simplistic, only singular keywords or singular phrases, results are limited to the latest twenty, and it searches on stop words (bad, bad, bad). But check out just how powerful this is:
Search Philadelphia’s blogs for:
Very Dynamic Web Interfaces
XML.com: an intro to the XMLHttpRequest object.
Apple’s documentation on this is an eye opener as well.
Google’s recent efforts (Google Suggest, Goggle Maps, GMail) have been showcases for this technique.
I think its safe to say that JavaScript’s time has finally come. Web UI developers better grok this and fast.
Transparency and forgiveness
It’s certainly true that remarks that formerly would have been private now are made not just public but super-public. But I don’t think we can survive the new transparency if we keep up the same old standards of criticism. I’ve said plenty of stupid things in my life. (Heck, I may be saying one right now.) Most have been in private. Some have been in public. And some things I said in public would look downright dastardly if viewed as isolated sentences. If we’re going to make more of the private public, we also have to give the benefit of the doubt, forgive, and laugh off the occasional offensive and stupid remarks. Otherwise, no one will survive the glare of the public.
Did you know a web-only album won a Grammy for the first time?
Eclipse 3.1M5 out
Get the latest and greatest version of Eclipse here.
Philly Future features Flickr
Say that five times! Check it out 🙂
A big thank you to Richard Eriksson and Roland Tanglao who saved me a ton of time by showing me how to make it work.